FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE OBJECTS: REDUX—50 Years of Craft Evolution January 31–March 27, 2020 VIP PREVIEW: RSVP ONLY Thursday, January 30, 5 -7pm OPENING NIGHT Friday, January 31, 5 -7pm CURATOR’S TALK WITH KATHRYN HALL Saturday, February 1, 2pm SCREENING & ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION Saturday, March 14, 2pm © J. Fred Woell FROM 1969 TO TODAY: 50 YEARS OF CRAFT EVOLUTION (January 2020) form & concept is thrilled to present OBJECTS: REDUX—50 Years of Craft Evolution, featuring over 70 pieces by seminal historical and contemporary craft artists, including J. Fred Woell, Sonya Clark, Ken Cory, Raven Halfmoon, Nicki Green, Jennifer Ling Datchuk and Kat Cole, among others. Ranging from textile, jewelry, metal, and enamel to wood, ceramics and glass, the exhibition positions work from the original 1969 OBJECTS: USA show alongside innovative craft objects and wearables by contemporary makers. In 1969, the Smithsonian American Art Museum debuted OBJECTS: USA, a sprawling exhibition featuring 308 craft artists and over 500 objects. The show would travel the United States and Europe, vaulting craft into the contemporary art milieu and forever changing the way we view material culture. Fifty years later, this tribute exhibition incorporates work by artists in the original display alongside historic and contemporary makers who expand upon and complicate the conversation. If OBJECTS: USA first established the field of craft as a vital component of the fine art world conversation, OBJECTS: REDUX demonstrates not only modern craft artists’ keen sense and appreciation of their predecesors, but also the field’s ongoing spirit of boundary-defying inventiveness and material resourcefulness. Curator William Dunn writes, “It’s wonderful to be a part of this show’s continued legacy. Having the opportunity to work with Kathryn Hall and Perry Price, and traveling this exhibition as it was originally, is nothing short of a dream.” Spanning the gallery’s entire atrium and second floor, the show gathers together works by artists represented in both the original Smithsonian ‘69 exhibit and the 2019 Houston Center for Contemporary Craft tribute show, with special additions of contemporary Southwest and Santa Fe-based craft art. OBJECTS: REDUX—50 Years of Craft Evolution is inspired by OBJECTS: REDUX—How 50 Years Made Craft Contemporary, curated by Kathryn Hall and Perry Price at Houston Center for Contemporary Craft and was developed in conversation with an exhibition series at the Racine Art Museum celebrating the 50th anniversary of OBJECTS: USA. OBJECTS: USA Artists: Janice Bornt Langdon, Ken Cory, Arline Fisch, David Gilhooly, Trude Guermonperz, Charles Loloma, Otellie Loloma, John Marshall, Hal Painter, June Schwarcz, Kay Sekimachi, Bob Stocksdale, Lynda Watson, James Wayne, J. Fred Woell Contemporary Artists: Wesley Anderegg, C Alex Clark, Sonya Clark, Kat Cole, James Corporan, Tanya Crane, Jennifer Ling Datchuk, Karen Donnellan, Robert Ebendorf, Josh Faught, Nicki Green, Raven Halfmoon, Holland Houdek, Yuri Kobayashi, Joshua Kosker, Mira Nakashima, Hannah Oatman, Suzanne Peck, Pencil Brothers, Chinami Ricketts, Rowland Ricketts, MJ Tyson, Mathew Szösz, Nancy Worden 435 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.780.8312 | [email protected] OBJECTS: USA ARTIST BIOS Janice Bornt Langdon pursued her interest in weaving at Cranbrook Academy of Art and Haystack Mountain School of Crafts studying with Jack Lenor Larsen, Annie Albers and other notable artists. She achieved early recognition when in the late 1950s her work was awarded the Purchase Prize for the Addison Gallery of American Art from a show curated by Gjorgy Kepes. She exhibited at the Oakland Art Museum, Detroit Institute of Arts, and at various sites in California where she had lived since 1960. Ken Cory was a prominent figure in the Northwest Studio Art Jewelry movement creating works with a strong Pop sensibility and wry sense of humor often incorporating found objects. During the 1970s he formed the artistic collaboration called The Pencil Brothers with artist Les LePere. Cory received his BFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts and his MFA from Washington State University. Arline Fisch was born in Brooklyn, NY, and received a B.S. degree in art education from Skidmore College and an M.A. from the University of Illinois. In 1956-57 she studied silversmithing at the School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen and in 1966-67 returned to Denmark for further training in metalsmithing. Since 1961, she has taught full time at San Diego State University. In 1985, Fisch was declared a “Living Treasure of California” by the State Assembly. David Gilhooly states that his lowbrow humor makes his work accessible so that “even my most maiden old aunt or my most drugged-out cousin can get at the meaning of the work or at least experience it!” He studied at the University of California, where he worked as an assistant to Robert Arneson. Gilhooly was a leading advocate of funk art, which challenged the seriousness of the art world by focusing on absurd images of everyday objects. He parodied ancient civilizations, religion, and politics through an alternative world of ceramic frogs and other creatures until 1983, when he began to use food as satyrical fodder. Trude Guermonperz was born in 1910 in Danzig, Germany and attended the School of Fine and Applied Arts in Halle-Saale, where she studied weaving under the tutelage of Bauhaus-trained artist Benita Otte. In 1960 she was named Chair of the Crafts Department of Californian College of Art & Design, and continued teaching there for nearly seventeen years. In 1970 Guermonprez was awarded the American Institute of Architects’ Craftsman’s Award, but she received little recognition during her lifetime. Charles Loloma was a Hopi Native American artist. He was a highly influential Native American jeweler during the 20th century and popularized use of gold and gemstones not previously used in Hopi jewelry. Loloma’s work was explored in a series on American Indian artists for PBS. Other artists in the series included R. C. Gorman, Helen Hardin, Allan Houser, Joseph Lonewolf, and Fritz Scholder. Otellie Loloma was an American artist, specializing in Hopi traditional pottery and dance. She was one of the first instructors hired for the Southwest Indian Art Project in Tucson, Arizona, a summer institute funded by the Rockefeller Foundation in 1960-1961. She joined the faculty of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, NM in 1962, a position she held until her retirement in 1988. In 1991, she was honored with a Women’s Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award. John Marshall’s major interest in gold and silver-smithing, basse-taille, and cloisonné enameling was developed under such distinguished artists as Frederick Miller, Kenneth Bates, John Paul Miller, and Toshiko Takaezu. His work, notable for its restrained elegance, has received many national awards. Mira Nakashima is following her father’s (George Nakashima) path by becoming a woodworker. She attended Harvard University and received a Masters degree in Architecture from Waseda University in Tokyo. She worked with her father for many years as a colleague and designer in his workshop. Since her father’s death in 1990, she has been the creative director of the Nakashima studio in New Hope, PA. Hal Painter was a craftsman and teacher residing in the midst of northern-Californian forest acreage, which provided much of the mood and subject matter of his work. Despite his seclusion, his work was exhibited widely, including at The Museum of Modern Art in NYC. 435 South Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.780.8312 | [email protected] June Schwarcz, born 1918 in Denver, studied industrial design at the Pratt Institute in New York and worked as a packaging designer for cosmetics and toy companies. She learned to enamel in the 1950s, experimenting with a wide variety of techniques. Designated a “Living Treasure of California” in 1985, Schwarcz also received the James Renwick Alliance Masters of the Medium Award (2009). Kay Sekimachi studied at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland from 1946 to 1949. In 1949 she took up weaving on the loom and became so adept at the labor-intensive process that she is often referred to as a “weaver’s weaver.” Today, almost fifty years after she began to work in fiber, Sekimachi is recognized as a pioneer in resurrecting it as a medium of artistic expression. Bob Stocksdale grew up on a farm in Huntington, Indiana. His family had no electricity and Stocksdale used a lathe powered by an old washing machine engine to make simple baseball bats, table legs, and croquet sets. He moved to Berkeley in 1946 and produced more than two hundred turned bowls every year from his basement studio. Stocksdale was known for the variety and rarity of materials in his work. Lynda Watson received her MFA from California State University, Long Beach in 1977. Since then, she has been the recipient of multiple awards, including two National Endowment for the Arts grants, and has shown her work nationally. Her work can be found in the permanent collection of the Museum of Art and Design in NY, among others. James Wayne is one of the leading West Coast glass artists. He produces sculptural, organic forms sometimes combined with cast bronze. He has also exhibited pottery, having studied with Shoji Hamada and Paul Soldner. He studied at San Jose State College and taught at U.S.C. and San Jose City College. J. Fred Woell, born 1934 in Evergreen Park, IL, was an American metalsmith who specialized in found object assemblages. He received many awards, including three National Endowment for the Arts grants, the Society of Arts and Crafts’ Artist Award (2004), and the Society of North American Goldsmith’s Lifetime Achievement Award (2012). He was named to the American Craft Council’s College of Fellows in 1995.
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